The Rythers had been established at Ryther in the West Riding since the twelfth century. Sir William Ryther had been summoned to Parliament between 1299 and 1307, but, as with many families of the same rank, those early summonses were not repeated.
Whatever the state of his parents’ long marriage, however, Ryther was heir to an estate substantial enough to compare with those of the leading West Riding gentry families of Gascoigne, Plumpton, Stapleton and Tempest of Bracewell.
No more is known of Ryther until 6 Mar. 1416 when he and his father witnessed a deed at Carlton for his first cousin, Sir Brian Stapleton†. Exactly three months later he was again involved with Stapleton, appearing before Richard Norton, c.j.c.b., in the London parish of St. Andrew in Holborn to acknowledge a debt of £500 to his cousin, payable at the following Michaelmas. It is probable that this debt had something to do with the division of the Aldeburgh inheritance, to which Sir Brian was coheir through his mother, Sibyl Aldeburgh’s elder sister.
Thereafter the improvement in Ryther’s material circumstances gave him little reason to pursue further military adventures. On the death of Sir Gilbert his wife fell coheiress to a once great inheritance. The bulk of that inheritance had been either alienated to the Percys or settled in tail-male with remainder to the Tailboys family as descendants of the sister of Sir Gilbert’s great-uncle of the half-blood, Gilbert Umfraville, earl of Angus. Further, our MP’s wife had to share what remained with her four sisters: on 26 July 1421 the escheator of Northumberland was ordered to divide the manor of Fawns (in Kirk Whelpington parish) and other lesser property between them.
None the less, with his father dead Sir William was able to make a generous provision for his wife. He conveyed his principal manor, that of Ryther, to feoffees closely associated with his wife’s family; then, on 1 May 1425, these feoffees, headed by Ralph, Lord Cromwell, and her uncle, Sir Robert Umfraville, resettled the manor on the couple and their issue.
These frequent appointments are hard to understand, but it is possible that Ryther’s connexions with the Crown were closer than implied by the surviving evidence. Suggestive here is the minor grant made on 25 Nov. 1435, soon after the end of his fourth shrievalty, to his son, William, of the marriage of Lionel, the young son and heir of Sir Richard Copley, and the wardship of some inconsequential lands. The younger William may already have had a place in the royal household as he certainly did by early in 1441 when he described himself as such in a petition to the King.
Towards the end of his last shrievalty, the death of Ryther’s elderly mother increased his wealth. According to the inquisition held at York on 3 Oct. 1439 she died seised of a moiety of the manor of Harwood, extended at £11 6s. 11d. p.a. but worth more. On 20 Oct., the same day as this inquisition was delivered into Chancery, the escheator was ordered to take his fealty for this moiety.
Soon after Sir William’s death, his son, describing himself as an esquire of the Household, petitioned the King about his father’s failure to account. This he blamed on the under sheriff, Roger Bryne, whom Ryther had entrusted with the task of accounting on his behalf. Bryne had fled, leaving our MP chargeable at the Exchequer in as much as £1,700. Ryther’s son had been able to find cash and discharges worth only £1,252, and feared that he was ‘like to lye’ in prison for the residue. He complained that he had already lost issues worth more than £40 through the seizures made by Tempest, a sum that did not go to a reduction of the amount owed. He asked for a pardon of £200, but was rewarded with only £140.
